Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

You can adjust all of your cookie settings by navigating the tabs on the left hand side.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.

If you disable this cookie, we will not be able to save your preferences. This means that every time you visit this website you will need to enable or disable cookies again.

3rd Party Cookies

This website uses Google Analytics to collect anonymous information such as the number of visitors to the site, and the most popular pages.

20 people you may have forgotten were in Gilmore Girls

Looking back, it’s easy to see Gilmore Girls as a kind of incubator for raw talent. Many of the main supporting characters have gone on to develop impressive careers in both film and television. Melissa McCarthy, of course, has gone on the one of the highest grossing female stars in Hollywood, while Adam Brody went on to find fame as Seth Cohen in The OC, Matt Czuchry became better known as Cary Agos in The Good Wife, and Todd Lowe, who played Lane’s husband Zack, later starred in True Blood. Danny Strong, who was already fairly well known to much of the Gilmore Girls audience for playing Jonathan in Buffy, is now an Emmy award-winning writer, having penned Empire and Game Change.

And it doesn’t just apply to the main stars – something in the rarefied air of Star’s Hollow seemed to nurture fledgling actors. Part of the joy in rewatching the show now is to spot the people, who, back when the series first started airing in 2000, were little-known players appearaning in small parts.

With the gang getting back together this Friday for Netflix’s A Year in the Life, here are 20 (although we could go on) cameos that you may have forgotten from Gilmore Girls.

Chad Michael Murray – S1 (various), S2 E9

Studly Murray first came to the attention of a young TV audience as Tristan Dugray, one of Rory’s Chilton schoolmates, and the cause of one of the first wobbles in her relationship with Dean – a sign of things to come. After 11 episodes, Murray left Gilmore Girls rather too abruptly for many fans’ liking, but before long he was back on our screens as love-interest Charlie in Dawson’s Creek. Since then, he’s had major parts in One Tree Hill and Chosen, and can now be seen in Agent Carter.

Krysten Ritter – S7 (various)

Ritter was known to some for her role as Gia in Veronica Mars before she got the part of Lucy, one of Rory’s Yale classmates, in the final series of Gilmore Girls. She went on to play Jane, Jesse Pinkman’s doomed lover, in Breaking Bad, and Chloe in Don’t Trust the B**** in Apartment 23, but is now best known as Jessica Jones.

Jon Hamm – S3 E5

Hamm pops up as one of Lorelei’s love interests, Peyton Sanders, in his pre-Donald Draper days. In the Season 3 episode Eight O’clock at the Oasis, he offers a taster of his Mad Men anti-hero.

Nick Offerman – S4 E7, S6 E4)

An early incarnation of the now infamous Ron Swanson can be seen as Beau Belleville, Jackson’s older brother. First seen in fan favourite episode The Festival of Living Art (Season 4, Episode 7), he later turns up at Jackson’s bachelor party, memorably trying it on with Lorelei, after being informed she’s a nymphomaniac.

Danny Pudi – S6 E13/14, S7 E6/7

Now better known as Abed Nadir in Community, Danny Pudi started out in Yale, as one of Rory’s fellow newshounds at Yale Daily News. We can only imagine the let-down community college must have come as, after such an elite liberal arts background.

Jane Lynch – S1 E10

Long before making her name for herself as Sue Sylvester in Glee, Lynch plays Richard’s exasperated nurse in Forgiveness and Stuff, after he has a heart attack in the first season – a sad intimation, perhaps, of Richard’s ultimate fate.

Seth MacFarlane – S2 E21, S3 E11

First appearing in Season 2, in an episode called Lorelei’s Graduation Day, MacFarlane later plays Emily’s lawyer in Season 3 episode I Solemnly Swear. In both episodes, he plays to type, as a wise-cracking asshole.

Max Greenfield – S4 E4

Greenfield, now synonymous with New Girl’s Schmidt, a part he seems born for, made an early appearance as Lucas in Season 4’s Chicken or Beef. One of Dean’s bachelor party attendees, it was a small role with only a few lines, and it was only his third credited TV part – he’d go on to Greek, Ugly Betty, Veronica Mars, before making his name in New Girl.

Alex Borstein – S1 E1/2/3/4, S3 E5, S3 E21, S5 E12

The voice of Family Guy’s Lois, who went on to appear in Shameless, was originally slated for the character of Sookie in Gilmore Girls’ unaired pilot. She wound up, instead, playing three different characters: Drella, the harpist at the Independence Inn; Miss Celine, Emily’s stylist; and the voice of Doris in Eight O’clock at the Oasis.

Masi Oka – S2 E4

Oka was given an unnamed part as a student who debates Rory after she gatecrashes a lecture in Season 2’s Road Trip to Harvard, and went on to star in Heroes.

Brandon Routh – S1 E13

Now a former Superman, Routh had a part in Concert Interruptus, in which, with just one line, he manages to lure Louise and Madeleine away from a much-anticipated Bangles concert.

Matt Jones – S3 E9

Badger from Breaking Bad played Morgan in A Deep Fried Korean Thanksgiving, in which, true to form, he deep-fries a whole turkey.

Ben Falcone – S3 E20

Melissa McCarthy’s real-life husband and director, who’s also appeared in various films including Bridesmaids, played Mr Brink in Say Goodnight Gracie.

John Kapelos – S6 E2

One of the wittiest cameos in a programme filled with witty cameos, the actor who plays the janitor in The Breakfast Club interrogates Rory in a nod to the John Hughes film, in Season 6’s Flight Face.

Traci Lords – S4 E5

One of America’s most famous former porn stars crashes the family-friendly show, playing interior designer Natalie Zimmerman in The Fundamental Things Apply in Season 4.

Michael York – S4 E9/10/19/20

Things got a little bit creepy as Paris started an affair with the much, much (MUCH) older college lecturer Asher Fleming, the classical actor who first came to prominence in the 1970s.

Madchen Amik – S2 E14, S3 E6/13

Twin Peaks’ first representative in Gilmore Girls is Amik, who played Sherry Tinsdale. While she only appeared in three episodes, she casts a long shadow as Christopher’s girlfriend and mother of their child Gigi.

Sherilyn Fenn – S3 E21, S6 (various), S7 E4/9/10/12)

The second Twin Peaks alumni represents another love threat to Lorelei as Anna Nardini, mother of Luke’s daughter April. Fenn also played Jimmy’s girlfriend Sasha in the much earlier episode Here Comes the Sun.

Billy Burke – S3 E11/12/14

Now best known as Charlie Swan, Bella’s dad in the Twilight series, Burke played Alex, whom Lorelei dated for about three episodes, before he disappeared into the ether.

Jon Polito – S3 E18 / S2 E19

Having taken memorable parts in the Coens’ Miller’s Crossing and Barton Fink, and after staring in Homicide: Life on the Street, Polito’s appearances as Father in Kirk’s short black-and-white film masterpiece, and as Pete the Pizza Guy, were no less seminal. In the latter, he goes into partnership with Rory, in an attempt to create the biggest pizza ever, as a surprise for Lorelei’s birthday. It’s a part he was made for.

Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life is now exclusively on Netflix UK, as part of a £7.99 monthly subscription. Seasons 1 to 7 are also available.

Images on VODzilla.co are authorised and subject to restrictions. Permission is required for any further use beyond viewing on this site. Remote control icon created by Bjoin Andersson from Noun Project.

VODzilla.co is partly funded through affiliate marketing, which means that clicking some links on this page may generate income for the site. However, this is an independent publication: we take care not to let commercial relationships dictate the editorial stance of content or the writing staff.

We are using cookies to give you the best experience on our website.
You can find out more about which cookies we are using or switch them off in settings.